How to Teach Students Who Don't Look Like You: Culturally Responsive Teaching Strategies (2nd Revised edition)

Description

Engage diverse learners in your classroom with culturally responsive instruction! This second edition includes new or expanded coverage of Latino students, ELLs, immigrant students, race, and racial identity, and new coverage of standards-based, culturally responsive lesson planning and instruction, differentiated instruction, RTI, and the Common Core State Standards. This book helps all educators tailor instruction to their unique student population and: Reflect on their cultures and how this shapes their views of the world Cultivate a deeper understanding of race and racism in the U.S. Create culturally responsive instruction Understand how culture affects learning.

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About Author

Consulting Description Bonnie M. Davis, PhD, is a veteran teacher of more than forty years who is passionate about education. She taught in middle schools, high schools, universities, homeless shelters, and a men's prison. She holds a doctorate in English from St. Louis University and is the recipient of numerous awards, including Teacher of the Year in two public school districts, the Governor's Award for Excellence in Teaching, and the Anti-Defamation League's World of Difference Community Service Award. She has presented at numerous national conferences and currently works in school districts across the country. Dr. Davis' work centers on examining what "we don't know we don't know" about ourselves in order to more effectively teach students who don't look like us. Moving from self reflection to action, her books offer educators culturally responsive, standards-based instructional strategies that bridge culture, language, race, and ethnicity. Dr. Davis's publications include the How to Teach Students Who Don't Look Like You: Culturally Responsive Teaching Strategies(2012);How to Coach Teachers Who Don't Think Like You: Using Literacy Strategies to Coach Across Content Areas (2007); The Biracial and Multiracial Student Experience: A Journey to Racial Literacy(2009); and Creating Culturally Considerate Schools: Educating Without Bias (2012) with coauthor Kim L. Anderson. She is currently working on the Equity 101 Series with Curtin Linton, Executive Vice President of School Improvement Network.

Contents

Foreword by Curtis Linton Preface Acknowledgments About the Author How to Read the Book Part I. Looking Inside Ourselves 1. Our Culture: The Way We View the World 2. Reflection Questions for Examining Our Inner Selves 3. Exploring Our Racial Identity Through Our Racial History 4. What Is Race? 5. A Day in the Life ... Part II. Listening to and Learning From Others 6. What Do We Need to Know About Culturally Diverse Learners? 7. Latino/a/Hispanic Learners: A Personal Story 8. New Immigrant Learners of the Twenty-First Century 9. What the Research Says About Learning Gaps 10. How to Build Relationships With Culturally Diverse Students and Families 11. Creating a School Culture That Welcomes Students, Staff, and Families Part III. Integrating New Knowledge 12. Strategies to Teach and Engage Culturally Diverse Learners and ELs 13. Moving Students From Apathy to Passion: Learning to Love Reading and Writing 14. Standards-Based, Culturally Responsive Lessons That Engage Learners 15. Readers and Writers Workshop: A Model for Standards-Based, Culturally Responsive Instruction 16. Teachers in Today's Classrooms Share Their Lessons Part IV. A Call to Action 17. A Call to Action: Sponsoring Academic Student Support Groups 18. A Call to Action: Taking Care of Yourself References and Resources Index